21

I am trying to get the following setup in Storyboard.

Storyboard

Where I have a table view in the beginning, and when I tap a cell it needs to transition to the tab bar controller, which works. But now I want a title and an extra navigation bar button in the the 2 most right controllers.

But I can't seem to drag a button to there or when setting the title, nothing shows up. How can I achieve this setup in storyboard?


Updated question, based on answer below.

New setup

When I have this new setup (thus with an extra navigation controller in between) I can set the title in the storyboard, but when running the app, the added title is not shown.

I have uploaded a Xcode project with exactly that setup. Perhaps it can come in handy.

1
  • Is your problem solved i gt the similar issue Dec 11, 2015 at 4:29

5 Answers 5

24

For changing the UINavigationBar title (with no need to create 2 other UINavigationController) you can just use

[self.parentViewController.navigationItem setTitle:@"Title"];

and for adding the right button use

self.parentViewController.navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemDone target:self action:@selector(myRightButton)];

on viewDidLoad method for each UIViewController referenced from your UITabBarController.

If you want to work with "navigation structures" inside your UIViewController from TabItems so you could edit your BUFViewController.m to that:

#import "BUFViewController.h"

@interface BUFViewController ()

@end

@implementation BUFViewController

- (void)viewDidLoad
{
    [super viewDidLoad];
    // Do any additional setup after loading the view, typically from a nib.
    [self.parentViewController.navigationController setNavigationBarHidden:YES];
    self.navigationItem.leftBarButtonItem = [[UIBarButtonItem alloc] initWithBarButtonSystemItem:UIBarButtonSystemItemDone target:self action:@selector(done)];
}

-(void)done{
    [self.parentViewController.navigationController popToRootViewControllerAnimated:YES];
}

- (void)didReceiveMemoryWarning
{
    [super didReceiveMemoryWarning];
    // Dispose of any resources that can be recreated.
}

@end

You have to think as your UITabBarController is inside your parent NavigationController, so you want to hide the parent UINavigationBar and show yours. After that, you'll be able to back to your table using popToRootViewControllerAnimated: on the parent's UINavigationController.

Hope that helps :)

4
  • Thanks for your reply. I have tried your idea, and it works, but it also kills the "back button" which normally would appear. (Since that is added to the overlaying navigation bar). Don't know if having 2 navigation bar's is the way to go here. But with one (my first screenshot) I can't seem to add titles or buttons.
    – Matthijn
    May 8, 2014 at 17:55
  • I see your edit and could add the back button in code indeed, and it works. But is there not something I am missing here? That this could be done in a more elegant way.
    – Matthijn
    May 8, 2014 at 17:57
  • 1
    I've made an edit, that should work pretty for you :) May 8, 2014 at 18:07
  • In case this helps anyone else, here is a similar approach in Swift: self.navigationItem.setRightBarButtonItem(UIBarButtonItem(barButtonSystemItem: .Search, target: self, action: "barButtonItemClicked:"), animated: true)
    – David M
    Mar 22, 2015 at 18:59
10

Just in case anyone was looking for a swift approach:

tabBarController?.title = "Your Title"
tabBarController?.navigationItem.rightBarButtonItem = UIBarButtonItem(title: "Right Button Title", style: UIBarButtonItemStyle.Plain, target: self, action: "rightButtonFunction")

The code is best placed in viewDidAppear or viewWillAppear so the title and button change as the different tabs are pressed.

You also wouldn't need the extra navigation controllers with this approach.

3

I looked at your test app, and I do see the title, very faintly, under the navigation bar. You can see both navigation bars if you select the tab bar controller, and uncheck the "Under Top Bars" box. However, this gives you a weird shadow on the navigation bar. I don't know if there's an easy way to fix this, but I don't think this UI with two navigation bars looks good any way. You might want to eliminate the initial navigation controller, and use a modal segue to present the tab bar controller instead. You could add a bar button item to the navigation controllers you still would have to do the dismissal of the modal view controller.

0

You need to replace those view controllers with UINavigationViewControllers.

Delete the right two view controllers.

Drag drop 2 UINavigationViewControllers onto the storyboard and position them how you want.

Then, you need to hook those new navigation view controllers to the tab bar controller. Ctrl click and drag from the tab bar controller to the navigation controllers. Select "view controllers" from the "Relationship Segue" section of the menu that pops up. Do this for both navigation controllers.

4
  • Yes, I have tried that (I have updated my question) since that was my initial idea. Then I can place a title in the storyboard builder, but it does not show up when I am running the app.
    – Matthijn
    May 8, 2014 at 17:14
  • Have you tried explicitly setting the top bar in the attributes inspector view of your storyboard instead of using "Inferred"?
    – Kamaros
    May 8, 2014 at 17:31
  • If by explicitly setting you mean using this input field, then yes. As you can see I can also drag a bar button out in the bar. But when running that app, nothing is shown for that view only the empty navigation bar.
    – Matthijn
    May 8, 2014 at 17:35
  • 1
    You can change the title of the tabBarController to update the title while maintaining the navigation back button. [[self tabBarController] setTitle:@"First View Controller"];. Dirty, but it works.
    – ColdLogic
    May 8, 2014 at 18:02
0
- (void)prepareForSegue:(UIStoryboardSegue *)segue sender:(id)sender
{
    if ([segue.identifier isEqualToString:@"Overview_Register"])
    {
        WDRegisterViewController *obj=(WDRegisterViewController *)[segue destinationViewController];
        obj.str_Title=@"Edit Profile";
        obj.isRegister=NO;
    }
}

            [self performSegueWithIdentifier:@"Overview_Measure" sender:nil];



    UIStoryboard *sb = [UIStoryboard storyboardWithName:@"Main" bundle:nil];
    WDPeekViewController *Peek = (WDPeekViewController *)[sb instantiateViewControllerWithIdentifier:@"WDPeekViewController"];
 [self.navigationController pushViewController:tabBarController animated:YES];

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